We learned this week that sequestration cuts will force furloughs for those who help keep Americans’ food supply safe, will deny tuition assistance to military veterans, and cause real hardship on low-income Americans who rely on housing assistance.
But for reasons that increasingly defy comprehension, Washington doesn’t want to talk about any of these issues or related sequester-related suffering. Instead, the cancelation of White House tours is dominating the Beltway conversation.
By my count, there were eight questions about the tours at yesterday’s White House press briefing. George Stephanopoulos wanted to talk about this during a rare interview with President Obama, asking two questions on this. Congressional Republicans wanted to talk about this when the president met with them privately, and they’re weighing a new resolution on the issue.
This was a bizarre distraction last week, but yesterday, it seems Washington’s interest in the sequestration cuts’ effect on White House tours took a farcical turn. The CBO says the sequester will cost the nation 750,000 jobs and the Beltway yawns; the White House says tours will be canceled and the Beltway screams.
It’s hard not to wonder why media professionals are playing along with this. Time’s Michael Grunwald said reporters are “obsessed” with the tours issue because “Republicans are talking about” it, and I suspect there’s something to this. I’ve long argued that Washington is simply “wired” to advantage Republicans — it’s GOP ideas that get attention; it’s GOP talking points that get internalized; it’s GOP voices that get aired — and so it stands to reason that if Republicans care about White House tour cancelations, it’s the issue that the president’s press secretary will get eight questions on, to the neglect of real sequestration consequences.
But that leads to an obvious follow-up question: why do Republicans care about this?
Ezra Klein, who lamented the “gross obsession” with the issue, had a helpful item on this yesterday.








